A glacier calves icebergs into a fjord off the Greenland ice sheet in southeastern Greenland, Thursday, Aug. 3, 2017. The Greenland ice sheet, the second largest body of ice in the world which covers roughly 80 percent of the country, has been melting and its glaciers retreating at an accelerated pace in recent years due to warmer temperatures.In Greenland, local entrepreneurs have come up with at least one fruitful response to climate change. "Not many people know that potatoes, strawberries are grown in southern Greenland," said Mette Bendixen, a climate researcher at the University of Copenhagen. "We project that this warming will continue into the 21st century, you would actually have a growth of the season of two months." (AP Photo/David Goldman)

"Knowledgeable experts within the University have questioned the methodology and accuracy of the report,” President Philip B. Oldham wrote to Environmental Protection Agency chief Scott Pruitt and Tennessee Rep. Diane Black.

Two Interior scientists quit after Secretary Ryan Zinke demanded that they provide his office with confidential data on the National Petroleum Reserve-Alaska before it was released to the general public.

Governors of Atlantic and Pacific coast states are still waiting for a meeting like the one in which Interior Secretary Ryan Zinke told Florida Gov. Rick Scott his state was exempted from expanded offshore drilling.

2017 was the second-hottest year in recorded history, NASA reported, while scientists from the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration reported it was the third-warmest they’ve ever recorded. The two government agencies use different methodologies to calculate global temperatures, but by either standard, the 2017 results make the past four years the hottest period ever recorded. […]

By 2019, a federal energy report forecasts, natural gas will provide 34 percent of U.S. electricity and coal 28 percent — making gas the top fuel for electricity generation, a role held by coal as recently as 2015.

We cover everything from how to save the world from climate change, to how to save money by better conserving energy at home -- with a focus on how people process environmental and scientific information and how they interact with energy in their daily lives. Content curated by Chris Mooney with contributions from The Post’s talented environment-focused writers Darryl Fears, Steven Mufson, Brady Dennis and freelance contributor Chelsea Harvey.